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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The influence of nutrition on the effectiveness of mimosine for defleecing sheep

PJ Reis and DA Tunks

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 29(5) 1057 - 1064
Published: 1978

Abstract

The effectiveness of mimosine as a chemical defleecing agent was assessed in adult sheep that were subjected to a variety of nutritional treatments prior to administration of mimosine, and in lambs receiving relatively high feed intakes. Mimosine was given as a continuous intravenous infusion over a period of 2 days.

Sheep receiving 600 g of a roughage-based diet per day were consistently defleeced following an infusion of mimosine at the rate of 80 mg/kg/day (designated the standard infusion). The prior feeding of a reduced intake of this diet (300 g/day) did not alter the amount of mimosine required to defleece sheep. Likewise, the prior abomasal infusion of an imbalanced mixture of amino acids, which depressed the wool growth rate, did not allow defleecing with a reduced amount of mimosine. A 4-day fast, commenced 3 days before the start of mimosine infusion, approximately halved the amount of mimosine required to defleece sheep.

The provision of a high intake of energy, together with large amounts of amino acids available for absorption from the small intestines (supplied by casein), for at least 1 week prior to mimosine infusion, completely prevented defleecing with the standard infusion of mimosine. The effects of these nutritional treatments could be obviated by a 4-day fast as described above. Also, increasing the rate of infusion of mimosine to 120 mg/kg/day largely overcame the effects of previous high nutrition. Relatively greater amounts of mimosine were required to defleece lambs than adults.

The concentration of mimosine in plasma was related to the rate of infusion of mimosine. However, fasting and a low dietary intake tended to enhance the concentration of mimosine in plasma for a given rate of infusion. Infusion of mimosine at the standard rate resulted in plasma mimosine concentrations of the order of 100 µmoles/l, but this concentration did not ensure that defleecing would be possible.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9781057

© CSIRO 1978

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